If one does short trips continuously, the BAT will not have a chance to be recharged correctly. Your longer drives should allow full recharge unless there is a defect in the system(s).
A START/STOP APPLICATION consumes a very large amount of charge for it to operate properly. Just the EPAS (ELECTRIC STEERING) consumes a huge amount. Add your accessories and the BMS (BATTERY MONITORING SYSTEM) just cannot keep up with the demand. It requires more lengthy trips.
And then there is the battery. STOP/START comes with an AGM BATTERY (supposedly). If the battery is replaced, the parts dude slides the new battery across the rear counter for the tech and most likely that battery is not tested to see if it is at full charge. It is installed in the car, the car seems to start OK, he slams the hood and drives it out. You're losing from the start (pun intended).
The dealer battery stock may not be rotated according to build dates. You get an older battery and it is not going to be up to snuff.
A TECH is paid FLAT-RATE, there is no time card other than required for OSHA/LABOR LAW. That is the main problem. They need to push it out and draw the next ticket.
- Auto Start-Stop may not shut your engine off if your vehicle battery is charging, the engine is still warming up, or if you’re using heat or air conditioning.
- Your vehicle is equipped with a heavy-duty starter and battery to help compensate for a high number of starts and stops.
SOURCE of ABOVE QUOTE -
https://www.ford.com/support/how-to...port/how-tos/more-vehicle-topics/fuel-and-fuel-economy/what-is-auto-start-stop/